Commodities Exchange


 Commodities Exchange Online Futures Trading
NCEL launches awareness drive for rice trading

KARACHI: National Commodities Exchange Limited (NCEL) on Monday launched a month-long pre-launch programme and investor awareness drive ahead of the commencement of listing and trading of its IRRI-6 Rice Futures Contract.

Managing Director Assim Jang said NCEL will be in Kandhkot, in upper Sindh, holding the first of investor awareness seminars aimed at informing the potential participants, including growers, millers, traders and exporters of the details of Futures Trading in IRRI-6 rice and encouraging their participation.

We have chosen these areas to start out investor awareness drive as they are the trading hubs of IRRI-6 rice, Assim said adding, we feel it is important to reach out to the key participants in our market on a one-to-one basis, they will not only ultimately benefit from this new contract, but also will provide NCEL with the necessary depth and liquidity, he added.


DGCX secures Singapore approval

Dubai: The Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange (DGCX) yesterday announced that it had secured approval from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), making DGCX a Recognised Market Operator (RMO) in Asia's key trading hub.

With the approval, DGCX - the Middle East's first commodities derivatives market - could now offer Singapore-based market participants direct access to its growing portfolio of commodity and currency contracts.

Commenting on the approval, Ahmad Bin Sulayem, chairman of DGCX, said, "Not only will this approval create opportunities for market participants based in Singapore, but is a clear demonstration of our commitment to meet customer demand for wider marker access". .


NYSE takes stake in India’s MCX

NYSE Euronext has bought a 5 per cent stake in India's largest commodities exchange, expanding its presence in the fast-growing economy.

The US group, which runs New York Stock Exchange, also has a stake in India's biggest stock market.

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American Stock Exchange Lists GreenHaven Continuous Commodity Index ...

NEW YORK, Jan. 24 /PRNewswire/ -- The American Stock Exchange(R) (Amex(R)) announced today that it has launched trading in the GreenHaven Continuous Commodity Index Fund (AMEX: GCC) , managed by GreenHaven Commodity Services, LLC.

GCC aims to track the performance of the Continuous Commodity Total Return Index, an equal weighted basket of 17 commodities (corn, wheat, soybeans, live cattle, lean hogs, gold, platinum, silver, copper, cocoa, coffee, sugar, cotton, orange juice, crude oil, heating oil and natural gas). Reuters America, LLC owns and calculates the Index.

"The American Stock Exchange is pleased to welcome and support GreenHaven as they enter the ETF marketplace," said Scott Ebner, Senior Vice President of the Amex's ETF marketplace. "GCC reflects a growing investor interest in commodity linked products."

Ashmead Pringle, President of GreenHaven Commodity Services, LLC, stated, "Increasingly, many investors have concluded that commodities are an asset class that should be represented in a balanced portfolio.


The Investment Column: Barclays investors should keep faith after ABN ...

In normal times, Barclays' shares would have bounced in the last few weeks after it lost out to Royal Bank of Scotland in the battle to buy ABN Amro. Instead, the bank's stock has fallen 12 per cent since 5 October, the day before it conceded defeat.

Barclays is not the only bank whose shares have suffered in the credit crunch. But Barclays is of particular concern because the success of its Barclays Capital investment bank has been closely identified with the booming credit markets that seized up in August.

The investment bank Credit Suisse restarted coverage of the stock yesterday with an 8 per cent downgrade to 2007 earnings, based on higher funding costs and expected reductions in trading and investment income.

Bob Diamond, who runs BarCap, has done the rounds to remind investors that his business does commodities and foreign exchange as well as leveraged finance and structured credit.


HSBC to set up brokerage in UAE equity markets

The company, to be called HSBC Middle East Securities, will offer UAE domestic market brokerage services to both institutional and retail investors. The company is expected to begin trading for institutions by the end of 2007, and to offer retail brokerage services in 2008. Emirates Securities and Commodities Authority (ESCA), the regulator for the UAE's securities markets, recently granted HSBC authorisation to establish the brokerage company. The authorisation is subject to the various legal and infrastructural requirements meeting the approval of ESCA, as well ADSM and DFM. With this approval, HSBC is poised to become the first global bank on the UAE's exchanges. HSBC already buys and sells UAE shares on behalf of Western institutions through third party brokers. In addition, HSBC is a sub-custodian on both ADSM and DFM, and this service will continue to be provided by the bank's specialist sub-custody operation.


'MAD' JIM CRAMER LOSES GOLDEN $50K BET

The host of CNBC's "Mad Money" now owes $50,000 after losing one of the worst wagers of his entire career to rival trading wiz Eric Bolling.

Cramer, who favors the phrase "Boo Ya," made an on-air bet with Bolling about a year ago that financial services would be the hottest sector of 2007.

Bolling, a former trader at the New York Mercantile Exchange, placed his money on oil and gold.

Investors who took Cramer's advice would have taken a 30 percent hit to their portfolios as the stocks of financial titans such as Citigroup and Merrill Lynch got hammered by the mortgage crisis.

On the other hand, investors savvy enough to follow Bolling's bet on gold and oil would have hit the jackpot, as the hot commodities jumped over 60 percent in the same period.

Cramer, through a spokesman, blamed his loss on Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's failure to cut interest rates more aggressively.


 
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